Hanover stepping up

Getting Daniel Passafiume
back this season certainly helped Hanover bounce back, but so did a
seamless head coaching transition. Hanover athletics photo

When Hanover head coach Joe Austin left the Panthers in February
to start a football program at Southwestern in Georgetown, Texas,
Steve Baudendistel went into action much like a defense trying to
stop an offense from scoring in the red zone.

Hanover was in the middle of recruiting and preparing for spring
football. The Panthers were trying to bounce back from a 5-5 season
after posting a 7-3 record in 2010. Baudendistel, a 2001 graduate
of Hanover and former football player, had been an assistant
football coach there for nine years. He said he went to athletic
director Lynn Hall to sell himself to the administration.

The decision to elevate Baudendistel to head coach looks like a
stroke of genius today. The Panthers are 6-2, undefeated in the
Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference and after playing
Manchester on Saturday, will battle rival No. 21 Franklin for the
league title, the Victory Bell and an automatic bid to the
playoffs.

“I had interviewed at other places and none of those jobs
worked out,” Baudendistel said. “When our coach left in
February, with the timing of it all, I went to our athletic
director and pled my case. I said it would be quicker to promote me
instead of going through a search and I could bring in a good staff
quickly.

“I’m very fortunate.”

Hanover’s transformation through the football season can
be pointed to a 33-27 overtime win over Rose-Hulman earlier in the
season. The Panthers opened the season with two losses at the hands
of Illinois College (7-1) and No. 10 Wabash (7-1). The Panthers
opened conference play with two teams they lost to last year, in
Mount St. Joseph and the Engineers.

After squeaking by Mount St. Joseph 28-24, Baudendistel said he
had to sit Britt down for a quarter in the Rose-Hulman game after
several turnovers. Britt, though, responded by bringing the
Panthers back for the overtime win.

“We had five turnovers in the first half,”
Baudendistel said. “I brought Dexter back in the fourth
quarter and he responded. In that game, I think our defense
realized how dominate it can be. They were put in a lot of
difficult spots in that game and played very well. Defensive
coordinator Denny Dorrell is keeping those guys excited about
playing football. They stayed on the course instead of pointing
fingers at each other when things go wrong. They learned how well
they can play when you play with emotion and flying to the
football.”

Since the Rose-Hulman victory, the Panthers are averaging 49
points per game while giving up 12.8 points per contest.

Hanover was blessed with a former All-American wide receiver on
offense. Daniel Passafiume returned for his senior season after
missing all of 2011. While Passafiume draws a lot of attention that
has opened things up for the other Panther wideouts. Passafiume has
eight touchdown catches, but Colton Zech and Dwayne Eubanks have
combined for another 11. Zech, Eubanks and Shawn Gibson all average
more than 10 yards per catch.

“Daniel knows he’s going to get double teams and
some teams are triple teaming him,” Baudendistel said.
“He attracts a lot of attention but we know if they do that
they won’t be able to cover our other guys. We have very good
receivers and those guys have benefitted from Daniel attracting so
much attention. Our offensive coordinator Benjamin Cullen has done
a great job.”

Quarterback Dexter Britt is averaging nearly 250 yards a game
passing and has thrown 25 touchdowns, averaging more than three
touchdowns per game. Baudendistel said sophomore running back
Spencer Corrao, though, has played a crucial role in the offense,
averaging 84.4 yards per game. He has had four games of more than
100 yards.

“We had a hard time running the ball to start the
season,” Baudendistel said. “We can’t be a
one-dimensional team and he has done a good job at that
spot.”

Hanover is led by senior linebacker Andy Dalton who has 96
tackles this season, but defensive linemen Ajani Jones, a junior,
and freshman Jake Stillwell have combined 14.5 sacks this year.

“We’re bringing a lot more pressure than what we
have in the past,” Baudendistel said. “Jake has been a
surprise playing as well as he has as a freshman. We had all of our
linebackers returning from last year so we knew those guys were
players. We’ve been rotating four corners throughout the game
and trying to eliminate the big play.”

As the 2012 season winds down, Hanover will be looking to make
big plays of its own with a coach that knows how to give a pretty
good sales job.

Little Brass Bell is big – for Elmhurst

When No. 24 Wheaton (6-2, 4-1 CCIW) travels to Naperville to
battle No. 7 North Central (7-1, 5-0) for the Little Brass Bell,
the Elmhurst Blue Jays will be watching the game closely. Elmhurst
(7-1, 4-1), carrying a win over Wheaton in its pocket, would love
nothing more than a Thunder victory to give it a shot at a CCIW
co-championship, provided that Elmhurst handles its business
against Carthage this week and formerly ranked Illinois Wesleyan
next week. In an effort to get into the playoffs, by either a title
or a Pool B bid, a share of the CCIW could help the Blue Jays
talking points.

Concordia-Chicago undefeated – and unranked

Concordia-Chicago is two games away from its first Northern
Athletics Conference title and a shot at the playoffs. The Cougars
are undefeated at 8-0, and 5-0 in conference play, but have not
been able to impress poll voters, receiving 10 votes in the latest
Top 25. Unfortunately for the Cougars, they won’t impress
voters with wins overs Lakeland (2-6, 2-3 in league play) and
Maranatha Baptist (0-5, 0-8) either over the next two weeks.
Concordia has won eight games for its fourth consecutive year after
years of futility on the football field. A win against Lakeland
will clinch Concordia’s spot in the playoffs because of its
victories over second place teams Wisconsin Lutheran and Concordia
(Wis.).